Resource types are a special family of data types that behave kind of weirdly. They are all subtypes of the fairly abstract Resource data type. Resource references are a more useful subset of this data type family.

In the Puppet language, there are literally never any actual values whose data type is one of these data types. That is, you can never create an expression where $my_value =~ Resource evaluates to true. (For example, a resource declaration — an expression whose value you might expect would be a resource — executes a side effect and then produces a resource reference as its value. A resource reference is a data type in this family of data types, rather than a value that has one of those data types.)

In almost all situations, if one of these resource type data types is involved, it makes more sense to treat it as a special language keyword than to treat it as part of a hierarchy of data types. It does have a place in that hierarchy; it’s just complicated, and you don’t need to know it to get nearly anything done in the Puppet language.

In other words: if you’re trying to learn everything that matters about the Puppet language, this is permission to turn back and go to another page.

Basics

Puppet automatically creates new known data type values for every resource type it knows about, including custom resource types and defined types.

These one-off data types share the name of the resource type they correspond to, with the first letter of every namespace segment capitalized. For example, the file type creates a data type called File.

Additionally, there is a parent Resource data type. All of these one-off data types are more-specific subtypes of Resource.

Resource data types with title

A resource reference can be used in several places. They’re useful enough that they have their own page.

The <SOME ARBITRARY RESOURCE TYPE> data type

For each resource type mytype known to Puppet, there is a data typeMytype. It matches no values that can be produced in the Puppet language.

You can use parameters to restrict which values Mytype will match, but it will still match no values.

Parameters

The full signature for a resource-type-corresponding data type Mytype is:

Mytype[<RESOURCE TITLE>]

All of these parameters are optional. They must be listed in order; if you need to specify a later parameter, you must specify values for any prior ones.

Position

Parameter

Data Type

Default Value

Description

1

Resource title

String

nothing

The title of some specific resource of this type. If provided, this will turn this data type into a usable resource reference.

Examples

File — the data type corresponding to the file resource type.

File['/tmp/foo'] — a resource reference to the file resource whose title is /tmp/foo.

Also:

Type[File] — the data type that matches any resource references to file resources. This is useful for, e.g., restricting the values of class or defined type parameters.

The Resource data type

There is also a general Resource data type, which all <SOME ARBITRARY RESOURCE TYPE> data types are more-specific subtypes of.

Like the Mytype-style data types, it matches no values that can be produced in the Puppet language.

You can use parameters to restrict which values Resource will match, but it will still match no values.

This is mostly useful if:

You need to interact with a resource type before you know its name. For example, you can do some clever business with the iteration functions to re-implement the create_resources function in the Puppet language, where your lambda will receive arguments telling it to create resources of some resource type at runtime.

Someone has somehow created a resource type whose name is invalid in the Puppet language, possibly by conflicting with a reserved word — you can use a Resource value to refer to that resource type in resource declarations and resource default statements, and to create resource references.

We will take this chance to say, yet again, that most users won’t need to deal with this.

Parameters

The full signature for Resource is:

Resource[<RESOURCE TYPE>, <RESOURCE TITLE>...]

All of these parameters are optional. They must be listed in order; if you need to specify a later parameter, you must specify values for any prior ones.

Position

Parameter

Data Type

Default Value

Description

1

Resource type

String or Resource

nothing

A resource type, either as a string or a Resource data type value. If provided, this will turn this data type into a resource-specific data type. Resource[Mytype] and Resource["mytype"] are both 100% identical to the data type Mytype.

2–∞

Resource title

String

nothing

The title of some specific resource of this type. If provided, this will turn this data type into a usable resource reference or array of resource references. Resource[Mytype, "mytitle"] and Resource["mytype", "mytitle"] are both 100% identical to the data type Mytype["mytitle"].

Examples

Type[Class] — the data type that matches any class references. This is useful for, e.g., restricting the values of class or defined type parameters.

Related data types

The abstract Catalogentry data type is the supertype of Resource and Class. You can use Type[Catalogentry] as the data type for a class or defined type parameter that can accept both class references and resource references.